This is a bit long for a comment.
The queries in your question are probably not doing what you expect. Oracle evaluates the WHERE
clause before the order by
. So, the following chooses one arbitrary row with MgO
and then does the trivial ordering of the one row by date:
SELECT sampled_date, result
FROM AF_VW
WHERE element = 'MgO' AND ROWNUM = 1
ORDER BY sampled_date DESC;
Really, to get the equivalent result, you would need to emulate the same, unstable logic. Unstable, because the results are not guaranteed to be the same if the query is run multiple times:
with mg as (
SELECT sampled_date, result
FROM AF_VW
WHERE element = 'MgO' AND ROWNUM = 1
),
coa as (
SELECT sampled_date, result
FROM AF_VW
WHERE element = 'CaO' AND ROWNUM = 1
),
sio2 as (
SELECT sampled_date, result
FROM AF_VW
WHERE element = 'SiO2' AND ROWNUM = 1
)
select (mgo.result + cao.result) / sio2.result
from mgo cross join cao cross join sio2;
I suspect you really want the most recent sample date, which is what VKP's answer provides. I just thought you should know that is not what your current queries are doing.
ORDER BY
is essentially meaningless. the ROWNUM = 1 condition is evaluated before the rows are sorted, so you are getting an arbitrary row and then "sorting" it by itself. If you want the rows with the most recent date, you could (a) use a DENSE_RANK function, (b) use an analytic function as in vkp's answer, or (c) use a nested subquery structure with the ORDER BY in the inner query and the ROWNUM condition in the outer query.select ((select 7 from dual) + (select 4 from dual)) / (select 5 from dual) from dual
. Replace queries in brackets with your statements, select result from dual.